MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

TYPE Restaurant & Bar

CLIENT Khao San Road

COMPLETION 2017

LOCATION 11 Charlotte Avenue, Toronto

Located in the bustling downtown district at King and Spadina, Khao San Road is the new punk in the hood. Tucked amongst a forest of towers, MAKE designed a restaurant that brought the street inside to create a unique dining experience.

Exposed concrete floors, full glass walls, graffiti walls and food shacks are some of the design features MAKE created to invert the exterior to the interior. The restaurant is instantly recognizable from the street by the two-story high wall of hand-made Thai tiles imported from Thailand and a double height graffiti wall. Local graffiti artist, Jimmy Chiale, was commissioned to paint the permanent mural as a way of stamping Toronto’s financial district with the local street art talent.

PRESS BlogTO, BlogTO, Designlines

PHOTOGRAPHY Robert Albertin

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

TYPE Restaurant & Bar

CLIENT Khao San Road

COMPLETION 2017

LOCATION 11 Charlotte Avenue, Toronto

Located in the bustling downtown district at King and Spadina, Khao San Road is the new punk in the hood. Tucked amongst a forest of towers, MAKE designed a restaurant that brought the street inside to create a unique dining experience.

Exposed concrete floors, full glass walls, graffiti walls and food shacks are some of the design features MAKE created to invert the exterior to the interior. The restaurant is instantly recognizable from the street by the two-story high wall of hand-made Thai tiles imported from Thailand and a double height graffiti wall. Local graffiti artist, Jimmy Chiale, was commissioned to paint the permanent mural as a way of stamping Toronto’s financial district with the local street art talent.

PRESS BlogTO, BlogTO, Designlines

PHOTOGRAPHY Robert Albertin

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

TYPE Restaurant & Bar

CLIENT Khao San Road

COMPLETION 2017

LOCATION 11 Charlotte Avenue, Toronto

Located in the bustling downtown district at King and Spadina, Khao San Road is the new punk in the hood. Tucked amongst a forest of towers, MAKE designed a restaurant that brought the street inside to create a unique dining experience.

Exposed concrete floors, full glass walls, graffiti walls and food shacks are some of the design features MAKE created to invert the exterior to the interior. The restaurant is instantly recognizable from the street by the two-story high wall of hand-made Thai tiles imported from Thailand and a double height graffiti wall. Local graffiti artist, Jimmy Chiale, was commissioned to paint the permanent mural as a way of stamping Toronto’s financial district with the local street art talent.

PRESS BlogTO, BlogTO, Designlines

PHOTOGRAPHY Robert Albertin

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

TYPE Restaurant & Bar

CLIENT Khao San Road

COMPLETION 2017

LOCATION 11 Charlotte Avenue, Toronto

Located in the bustling downtown district at King and Spadina, Khao San Road is the new punk in the hood. Tucked amongst a forest of towers, MAKE designed a restaurant that brought the street inside to create a unique dining experience.

Exposed concrete floors, full glass walls, graffiti walls and food shacks are some of the design features MAKE created to invert the exterior to the interior. The restaurant is instantly recognizable from the street by the two-story high wall of hand-made Thai tiles imported from Thailand and a double height graffiti wall. Local graffiti artist, Jimmy Chiale, was commissioned to paint the permanent mural as a way of stamping Toronto’s financial district with the local street art talent.

PRESS BlogTO, BlogTO, Designlines

PHOTOGRAPHY Robert Albertin

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

MAKE STUDIO - KHAO SAN ROAD

TYPE Restaurant & Bar

CLIENT Khao San Road

COMPLETION 2017

LOCATION 11 Charlotte Avenue, Toronto

Located in the bustling downtown district at King and Spadina, Khao San Road is the new punk in the hood. Tucked amongst a forest of towers, MAKE designed a restaurant that brought the street inside to create a unique dining experience.

Exposed concrete floors, full glass walls, graffiti walls and food shacks are some of the design features MAKE created to invert the exterior to the interior. The restaurant is instantly recognizable from the street by the two-story high wall of hand-made Thai tiles imported from Thailand and a double height graffiti wall. Local graffiti artist, Jimmy Chiale, was commissioned to paint the permanent mural as a way of stamping Toronto’s financial district with the local street art talent.

PRESS BlogTO, BlogTO, Designlines

PHOTOGRAPHY Robert Albertin